Brisbane Valley Rail Trail
  Queensland's premier rail trail – 148km from Wulkuraka (Ipswich) to Blackbutt.
 

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Brisbane Valley Rail Trail

The Brisbane Valley Rail Trail (approved 2007; completion 2012) will recycle the Brisbane Valley Railway Line (approved 1882; completed 1913; closed 1989).

The major stations along this line were Brisbane Valley Junction (near presentday Wulkuraka) – Fernvale – Lowood (1884) – Coominya – Esk (1886) – Toogoolawah (1904) – Harlin (1910) – Moore – Linville – Blackbutt (1912) – Yarraman (1913).

Bus and truck services linked Yarraman at the end of the line to Nanango, Cooyar and Goombungee.

The last thirty years of the twentieth century saw not only the decline in the importance of branch rail lines but also massive increases in the population of greater Brisbane and surrounding areas of South East Queensland.

The last regular Ipswich to Yarraman steam train ran in 1969. In 1988 the rail motor (diesel railcar) service came to an end. In 1993 work commenced on ripping up the track and almost every other reminder that trains once passed this way.

Esk – Toogoolawah : C17 locos Lowood Station
Linville : early C20 Esk–Toogoolawah : mid-C20 Lowood : early C21
Today a few stations survive. Lowood's station and goods warehouse remain in good condition (the latter as a religious centre) and the rail trail between Fernvale and Lowood along the Brisbane River is open. The station at Esk is awaiting restoration but Toogoolawah's is well preserved. Linville's station building and some derelict rolling stock remain at the beginning of the 23km Blackbutt Range section of the trail. Yarraman station is in use as a heritage centre.

The demise of the line coincided with the construction of Wivenhoe Dam on the Brisbane River which would submerge parts of the railway. After a quarter of a century, the dam proved to be inadequate even in good years; there simply isn't enough water in the river to supply Queensland's capital. Blaming the situation on drought rather than overpopulation, the Queensland Government fast-tracked a scheme to pump the city's used water back up the river – the obvious route for the uphill pipeline being the disused rail corridor. Duirng 2007–08 much of the southern section of the rail trail-to-be looked more like a freeway construction site than an abandoned railway. That said, it must be added that where the pipeline construction has been completed the old rail route looks exactly like an old rail formation: congratulations are in order.

When complete, the rail trail will provide a 148-kilometre multi-use recreational trail from Ipswich to Blackbutt for walkers, cyclists and horse riders. Planned for completion a century after the first trains steamed into Blackbutt, it will be the longest rail trail in Australia. A similar trail will run south from Ipswich to Boonah.


More Information…

-->E. DeLacy : History of BV Line + Recommendations for Trail (highly recommended)
Please email RailTrails.net.au for details (our offer of a link was not accepted).


Fernvale - Ipswich - Fernvale Rail Trail Ipswich – Fernvale
  • Ipswich (south) – Fernvale (north) : 22 km
  • rough; mountain bikes, walking
  • 5km W of Ipswich CBD
Fernvale - Lowood Rail Trail Fernvale – Lowood
  • Fernvale (east) – Lowood (west) : 9 km
  • smooth compacted surface; all bikes, walking, horse riding, wheelchairs
  • 70km NW of Brisbane CBD
Moore - Blackbutt Rail Trail Moore – Linville
  • Moore (south) – Linville (north) : 7 km
  • some sections extraordinarily steep
  • 135km NW of Brisbane CBD
Linville - Blackbutt Rail Trail Linville – Blackbutt
  • Linville (east) – Blackbutt (west) : 23km
  • rough surface; steep gullies; mountain bikes, walking, horse riding
  • 150km NW of Brisbane CBD

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